Experimental and theoretical investigation of the role of nanofibrous topography feature size on adhesion of Candida albicans

Biofilm formation on medical devices is responsible for a substantial portion of healthcare associated infections with approximately 99,000 deaths and estimated financial burden of $28-$45 billion annually. Given the long-standing challenges of biofilm eradication, physical and chemical surface modi...

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Main Author: Kim, Ah-Ram
Other Authors: Mechanical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73314
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-733142020-09-29T05:39:43Z Experimental and theoretical investigation of the role of nanofibrous topography feature size on adhesion of Candida albicans Kim, Ah-Ram Mechanical Engineering Behkam, Bahareh Davalos, Rafael V. Nain, Amrinder nanopatterned surfaces biofilm fungal infection adhesion model antifouling Biofilm formation on medical devices is responsible for a substantial portion of healthcare associated infections with approximately 99,000 deaths and estimated financial burden of $28-$45 billion annually. Given the long-standing challenges of biofilm eradication, physical and chemical surface modifications to prevent biofilm formation from the early adhesion stage, continue to gain momentum. Nanoscale structural features, ubiquitous in both natural and synthetic surfaces, are increasingly recognized to have wide-ranging effects on microorganism adhesion and biofilm development. In this thesis, bio-inspired nanofiber-coated polystyrene surfaces were developed to systematically investigate how highly ordered surface nanostructures (200nm-2000nm in size) impact adhesion and proliferation of model fungal pathogen, Candida albicans. A theoretical model for cell-textured surface interaction was also developed using thermodynamic principles to demonstrate that single cell adhesion to surface can be used to describe the population behavior. The trend for adhesion density of C. albicans on nanofiber-textured surfaces of varying diameters correlates with our theoretical finding of adherent single-cell energetic state. Findings from this thesis can be used for enhanced ab initio design of antifouling surfaces for medical applications and beyond. We demonstrate a successful prototypical example of reduction in biofilm formation by optimally designed nanofiber coating of urinary catheters. Master of Science 2016-10-21T06:00:33Z 2016-10-21T06:00:33Z 2015-04-29 Thesis vt_gsexam:4811 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73314 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic nanopatterned surfaces
biofilm
fungal infection
adhesion model
antifouling
spellingShingle nanopatterned surfaces
biofilm
fungal infection
adhesion model
antifouling
Kim, Ah-Ram
Experimental and theoretical investigation of the role of nanofibrous topography feature size on adhesion of Candida albicans
description Biofilm formation on medical devices is responsible for a substantial portion of healthcare associated infections with approximately 99,000 deaths and estimated financial burden of $28-$45 billion annually. Given the long-standing challenges of biofilm eradication, physical and chemical surface modifications to prevent biofilm formation from the early adhesion stage, continue to gain momentum. Nanoscale structural features, ubiquitous in both natural and synthetic surfaces, are increasingly recognized to have wide-ranging effects on microorganism adhesion and biofilm development. In this thesis, bio-inspired nanofiber-coated polystyrene surfaces were developed to systematically investigate how highly ordered surface nanostructures (200nm-2000nm in size) impact adhesion and proliferation of model fungal pathogen, Candida albicans. A theoretical model for cell-textured surface interaction was also developed using thermodynamic principles to demonstrate that single cell adhesion to surface can be used to describe the population behavior. The trend for adhesion density of C. albicans on nanofiber-textured surfaces of varying diameters correlates with our theoretical finding of adherent single-cell energetic state. Findings from this thesis can be used for enhanced ab initio design of antifouling surfaces for medical applications and beyond. We demonstrate a successful prototypical example of reduction in biofilm formation by optimally designed nanofiber coating of urinary catheters. === Master of Science
author2 Mechanical Engineering
author_facet Mechanical Engineering
Kim, Ah-Ram
author Kim, Ah-Ram
author_sort Kim, Ah-Ram
title Experimental and theoretical investigation of the role of nanofibrous topography feature size on adhesion of Candida albicans
title_short Experimental and theoretical investigation of the role of nanofibrous topography feature size on adhesion of Candida albicans
title_full Experimental and theoretical investigation of the role of nanofibrous topography feature size on adhesion of Candida albicans
title_fullStr Experimental and theoretical investigation of the role of nanofibrous topography feature size on adhesion of Candida albicans
title_full_unstemmed Experimental and theoretical investigation of the role of nanofibrous topography feature size on adhesion of Candida albicans
title_sort experimental and theoretical investigation of the role of nanofibrous topography feature size on adhesion of candida albicans
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73314
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